Watch CBS News

Gaza Militants Escape Behind Human Shield

Militants holed up inside a Gaza mosque besieged by Israeli troops escaped Friday after hundreds of women who streamed there to serve as human shields provided cover for their flight, the army said.

But before their 19-hour standoff with militants ended, troops opened fire on a group of women headed for the mosque, killing one and wounding 10, Palestinian officials and witnesses said.

Soldiers seized Beit Hanoun on Wednesday in their fiercest bid in months to halt Palestinian rocket fire on nearby Israeli communities. More than 20 Palestinians, most of them gunmen, have been killed since the offensive began, including an unidentified 22-year-old man shot dead on Friday.

The mosque became the focus of the fighting in Beit Hanoun after gunmen — estimates ranged from one dozen to several dozen — sought refuge from troops there Thursday. Most were thought to belong to the military wing of the ruling Hamas party.

Israeli tanks and armored personnel carriers quickly surrounded the building, and the two sides began exchanging fire that lasted throughout the night, the military and Palestinian security officials said.

Israeli soldiers trying to pressure the gunmen to surrender also threw stun and smoke grenades, and knocked down an outer wall of the mosque with a bulldozer, causing the ceiling to collapse.

With sporadic shooting persisting Friday morning, Hamas radio broadcast a call to women to go to Beit Hanoun to shield the militants. Dozens of women left their homes to hurry to the mosque, and en route, came under Israeli fire, witnesses and officials said.

One woman, about 40, was shot dead, and 10 others were wounded, they said.

The army said troops spotted two militants hiding in the crowd of women and opened fire, hitting the two.

By mid-morning Friday, a large group of veiled women protesters gathered outside the mosque, where troops were positioned in tanks and armored personnel carriers. The army said the gunmen inside the mosque were able to take advantage of the demonstration to escape because there weren't enough infantrymen to block the protesters from approaching the building, and troops didn't want to shoot into the crowd.

But live ammunition was fired in the course of the demonstration, wounding a Palestinian cameraman and an undetermined number of women. Hospital officials reported that many of the women were shot in the foot.

"The criminal enemy campaign against our people will collapse and fail, like previous campaigns," vowed Ismail Radwan, a Hamas spokesman.

In other developments:

  • An Israeli aircraft fired a missile early Friday morning at a car in Gaza City carrying four gunmen from the Palestinians' ruling Hamas party, CBS News reporter Robert Berger says. All the gunmen were killed, including a senior commander and a bodyguard for a Palestinian cabinet minister.
  • Israeli troops opened fire at two Palestinians preparing a car bomb in the West Bank city of Nablus on Friday morning, killing one and wounding another, the military said. Palestinian officials identified the wounded man as a senior militant from a violent faction affiliated with the military wing of President Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah party and the dead man as his teenage brother.
  • Israeli troops arrested a Palestinian Cabinet minister in the West Bank town of Ramallah on Friday, Palestinian security officials said. The officials identified him as Public Works and Housing Minister Abdel Rahman Zidan of Hamas. Dozens of other Hamas ministers and lawmakers have been arrested in previous Israeli sweeps after Hamas-linked militants killed two Israeli soldiers and captured a third in a cross border raid on June 25. The Israeli army said only that it arrested a Hamas activist.
  • Former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon was taken Friday to an intensive care unit after his overall condition and heart function deteriorated, a spokesman for the hospital said. Sharon, who has been in a coma since he suffered a major stroke in January, contracted a new infection that affected his heart, said David Weinberg, a spokesman for the Sheba Medical Center outside Tel Aviv.

    Loudspeakers across Gaza called on people to come to demonstrations after Friday prayers to express solidarity with Beit Hanoun. By late morning, two rallies were already in progress in Beit Hanoun, and militants in the crowds were firing at soldiers, the army said.

    Elsewhere in Beit Hanoun, Israeli troops lowered their visibility, after two days of fierce fighting.

    No air strikes were reported, and residents said infantrymen had stopped patrolling the streets. Tanks and armored personnel vehicles were in sight, however, and snipers were positioned on about two dozen rooftops.

    The army said it targeted Beit Hanoun because it was a major staging ground for rocket attacks. But Israeli officials have said the takeover of the town did not signal the start of a wider-scale military offensive in Gaza.

    Militants have been undeterred by the offensive, however, and have continued firing rockets, including two that landed in southern Israel on Friday, slightly wounding two people.

    The incursion into Beit Hanoun was launched as Abbas, a moderate, tried to form a new government with Hamas. A top Abbas aide said Thursday that the Palestinian president would seek new elections if talks do not produce results in about two weeks.

    Abbas has been trying to end a punishing aid cutoff by setting up a government acceptable to the West, either in a power-sharing arrangement between Hamas and his Fatah movement, or by appointing independent professionals agreeable to the ruling party. Hamas has balked at demands that it recognize Israel, however, and no solution to the deadlock has emerged.

    Independent legislator Mustafa Barghouti, who has been shuttling between the two sides, said Thursday that an agreement on a new government is close, but he would not disclose details. "We have made good progress. We are almost there," Barghouti said after meeting with Haniyeh.

  • View CBS News In
    CBS News App Open
    Chrome Safari Continue